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Bull riders keep sport alive in area For aspiring young bull riders, the chaos of a looming show is always preceded by a little bit of peace on the roads. They find comfort in the journey toward the ring, winding on cracked, two lane byways they know so well.They weave around farms they've spent their lives on and they engine past large green trees they once climbed. It's a cycle they will repeat, a rhythm they will breathe, because their hopes live eights seconds at a time, because their bodies are at the mercy of those 1,200 pound bulls.It's a tough challenge, this dream. Only a few riders ever see the biggest crowds, only a handful ever fight the meanest bulls, only the luckiest win the largest prizes.So the young men who ride these beasts every weekend seem to be the most driven, the most willing to give it all up for a chance to be in the ring."I'm going to ride as long as I can," said Max Miller III, a 21 year old Staunton resident and six year bull rider. "As long as I still love it."In rural hamlets with sleepy main streets and sprawling farms, you will find bull riding. It resides here, in places without stoplights, in neighborhoods where you live down the street from the police chief.On a recent Saturday, the main event was at the end of a long stretch of crushed gravel at Oakland Heights Farm in Gordonsville, population 1,500. It's roughly two hours before the start of this Southern Extreme Bull Riding Association (SEBRA) event.Miller is 6 foot 1 with long arms and a sculpted face, wearing a blue and orange flat brimmed cap. He's skinny, seems like he would break in half if a bull were to test him in the ring, but it's a deceptive look many other of his competitors share, all young faces and lean builds.He sits in his car with his girlfriend, Claire Stinnett, and puts blue Icy Hot on his ankles.MORE ON BULL RIDING: Longevity remains elusive for ridersStinnett, 22, has striking blue eyes, tan skin and long, jet black hair. The pair started dating just five months ago, but they met at this same farm in 2012, when Miller was still a teenager. She is from Culpeper, but comes to almost all of his events at Oakland Heights.She's one of a few women in Gordonsville supporting their men who ride. Felicia Denninger, who's here for the first time watching her boyfriend, Shane Stiffler, idles around Stinnett's car with her 5 month old baby.Stinnett says she understands why more women aren't here. "Most of the guys don't bring their girlfriends, because they want to meet other girls," she says. And that's easy enough to understand, seeing as though most men are in their late teens or early 20s and living single lives.Miller gets out of the car and heads to the pen with his gear. He moves with pace almost everywhere he goes. He stretches his legs, tossing his left foot on the highest rung on the nearest metal fence, revealing a gymnast's flexibility.He talks with his friend who first introduced him to bull riding, and then another friend, a rider from Rockbridge County.Buy PhotoBull rider Max Miller (right) of Staunton helps a rider already on a bull in a starting chute with getting ready before a ride during the Gordonsville Bull Riding Rodeo at Oakland Heights Farm in Gordonsville on Saturday, May 10, 2014.
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